SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Gold/Mining/Energy : SOUTHERNERA (t.SUF)

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: Diamond Daze who wrote (3859)7/2/1999 12:58:00 PM
From: VAUGHN  Read Replies (3) of 7235
 
Hello DD

Thanks. Not sure what it said, but if you check the chart I posted Wednesday you can see that between the artisinal miners and small operators in Brazil, the country produced $116,000,000 in diamonds in 1998 from 1,400,000 carats for $82.86/carat. At .01c/m3 an aluvial mining operation might realize $.8286/M3. So a miner must move 1000M3 of gravel to realize $828.60. Any idea how much Ekati realizes from 1000M3 of ore?

On an unrelated note, this article is interesting as it seems to sum up what I suggested three years ago. Then, everyone was excited about Alberta and not a few were upset with me for suggesting the play was not likely to pan out.

Diamond play leaves Alberta in the rough as NWT shines.
Maturing investors won't buy kimberlite

David Jordan
Business in Vancouver June22-28, 1999

As the Alberta diamond play turns to dust, a mature industry is growing around a handful of Vancouver junior mining companies now developing sites in the Northwest Territories.

A year ago, all it took was a press release announcing the discovery of a kimberlite pipe to incite an investor frenzy on the Vancouver and Toronto stock exchanges. Today, savvy investors want to know more about the quantity and quality of diamonds found in the pipe.

The result is a shake-out in the junior mining patch that has left just a handful of rapidly maturing diamond exploration companies.

" Over the years this has become a much more mature business because people have learned so much," said Canaccord mining analyst David James. "The crazy little guys have departed for Voisey's Bay and then Indonesia and then turned to dust."

The shake-out has left the Alberta diamond play all but dead, while investment dollars pour into companies developing properties in the Northwest Territories.

The biggest loser in the investor flight to quality is Ashton Mining, which hitched its fortunes to Alberta's Buffalo Hills area. Ashton was riding high last year following a string of reported kimberlite discoveries. But as more discerning investors looked for favourable evaluations from Antwerp diamond appraisers, Ashton quickly lost its shine. News of yet another disappointing evaluation last November sent the stock plummeting to the $1 range, after it had trading between $3 and $6 for most of 1998.

Juniors following Ashton to the bottom of the charts include Everst Mines and Minerals, Lucero Resource Corp., Mount Hope Resources, Primero Industries, Pure Gold Minerals and Trymin Resources. All are trading at or near 52-week lows.

Senior companies with proven diamond properties have given the NWT diamond play worldwide credibility, and juniorswith promising bulk samples still offer plenty of opportunities for investors with a higher tolerance risk.

Kelowna-based Dia Met Minerals and partner BHP Diamonds of Australia brought international attention to Canada's North with the opening of the Ekati mine last October. Ekati's production has exceeded expectations and high prices commanded in world auctions have dispelled fears that overproduction could lead to a slump in world diamond markets.

There's still plenty of upside potential for investors in Dia Met, according to Yorkton Securities analyst Art Ettlinger, but it's the juniors offering much higher risk/reward ratios that have lit up the trading board. Leading those is Vancouver's Winspear Resources.

" As far as specualtion goes, thank God for Winspear, because along with Ekati, that has brought by far the most attention to the Canadian diamond industry," said Ettlinger...

djordan@biv.com

The article goes on about Winspear so I'll cut it off...

Wonder why the three big boys are investing so much time and effort in the NWT?

If you want to see the market's reaction to a junior making a good African discovey announcement, check out Trivalence's NR the other day and how the market rewarded them.

Regards
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext